and yet, so many coaches online and those seen live, continue to try to defy physics by talking about "putting more weight into the ball" (which would surely infer that putting on excess weight would result in faster balls); nice to see some sense matched to simple graphics
“Putting on more weight”, there’s an idea 😂 Thanks for your comments. The beauty of The Line is that even a young player can gain strength and better timing with the technique.
@@biggerbettertennis you're right, that's why awareness of their own body parameters is actually the most important aspect for beginners (of all ages) to develop, so they can relate their contact points to their head-hip-heel alignment (I cue with the "3Hs"). I also explain and demo that when they may experiment with differing grips and stances, the rule is never broken.
I love watching ur videos, thank you. 🙂🙏
and yet, so many coaches online and those seen live, continue to try to defy physics by talking about "putting more weight into the ball" (which would surely infer that putting on excess weight would result in faster balls); nice to see some sense matched to simple graphics
“Putting on more weight”, there’s an idea 😂 Thanks for your comments. The beauty of The Line is that even a young player can gain strength and better timing with the technique.
@@biggerbettertennis you're right, that's why awareness of their own body parameters is actually the most important aspect for beginners (of all ages) to develop, so they can relate their contact points to their head-hip-heel alignment (I cue with the "3Hs"). I also explain and demo that when they may experiment with differing grips and stances, the rule is never broken.
The line, contact foot to head, while hitting the ball. Will try this. Golf swing, leading leg up, similar concept?
@@robertwong-w5s I guessing so Robert. Sounds like the same concept of energy and timing from the ground